From the white paper:
"If a file is stored on the DigiPulse servers that contains an address of a wallet or any other information, the passing of which to a 3rd party can lead to losses for the original asset holder, DigiPulse does not take any liabilities if the information is lost or corrupted through acts of malicious attacks on the service."
So in other words, if someone attacks your servers successfully and you lose information or even assets stored on your platform, you will not take responsibility?
I had a chat with Dmitry (DigiPulse dev) about this question. I quote him here:
"We dont control and do not encourage storing both private and public keys in plain text. We recommend storing this information in encrypted way and leaving salt/access key to the inheritor. Thus neither us, nor the intruder will be able to use this to their advantage. Primary purpose of our service is having the guarantee that nothing will go missing and inheritor will have access to all services."
So DigiPulse primarily does not store assets themselves, but information about where those assets are. If someone has a wallet at Coinbase and the original owner dies, maybe the rightful inheritors will never find out. DigiPulse jumps in and provides exactly that service: the Coinbase wallet owner specifies a way to address the rightful inheritor and DigiPulse - should the original owner die - informs the rightful inheritor about the connection between the original owner and Coinbase or provides the rightful inheritor with whatever information has been stored by the original owner on the Digipulse platform.
Hope that answers your question.